This is an early work in process. Not ready for people to start randomly interjecting info yet unless you personally have a pile of games installed and want to contribute. Trying to stick with first-hand experience for the PC games, not info found online.

We could share a dropbox folder and start working on a spreadsheet if you want. Just make a few columns and start adding to it.

How about a google spreadsheet?

PC, PS2, PS3 on different sheets?

The one thing I'd like to avoid with the PC games is people chiming in based on what they've read instead of actual testing.Sometime you'll read that a game has ffb when it only has rumble. Rumble will work on a G27, but not older wheels.Very old games used a different protocol for ffb that was specific to the MS Sidewinder wheel or the first Logitech Formula Force.Although they technically had ffb, they won't work with modern wheels.

I'd like to keep the mouse and LAN columns so I know whether it plays nice with cabs or linking.It might be best to ditch the internet column as support goes away as the game ages.

The primary reason for the OS column is so people will know whether or not the game will run on their XP cab.I also haven't had much luck getting some of the Windows 95 games running on Win7. (currently installing Win7 for the new cabs btw)

1) With some of the older games, it shows up as a plain joystick. Shall we still call that supported or add a legend with things like J=shows as joystick, X=xbox360 controller support only

Although not really related to wheel support, I added a Nintendo 64 tab with all the racing games for that console.There are a lot of arcade ports for that system that either don't work in MAME or require a decent processor in MAME.

It should be complete. If anything is missing let me know.I have not tested all of them to ensure that they work with a driving cab setup.

I'd like to do the same for Dreamcast. This may eventually evolve into a spreadsheet of all driving games with analog controls.I have no interest in listing the games for the old consoles that didn't have analog controls.

I downloaded a bunch of abandonware PC driving games this morning. Old stuff. I'll let you know if its worth including.

The original Playstation will be a pain because the dual analog controller wasn't released until years after the console, so all the games made before that and a fair number made after that don't even support analog controls.

Xbox - can't emulate it. Logitech wheels don't work on them (without a 3rd party adapter).

Drop the Xbox.

The fact that the OS is based on Windows and doesn't use a native USB driver? Ya.. screw that system.

Too late. Done except for formatting. Shame there wasn't a better wheel for it.The linking is pretty cool. Guess I need to add that column to PS2 games too.It's not too bad to look up since it's on the back of the cover.

Dropped in a giant list of driving games for PS2. Not sure why, but it kept the original ones at the bottom when I tried to sort alphabetically.Ended up having to copy and paste them into the list in the correct spots. So.....don't sort that page, or it might separate them out again.I made a backup just in case.

The ones that have the details filled out are from the Logitech website as supporting the Driving Force wheels.Those still need the number of networked players allowed filled in.

The best source of information seems to be viewing high res scans of the covers.

I managed to find a spreadsheet of PS1 games. Sorted by genre, delete unrelated genres, pick through simulation & sports....bingo-bango-jimmy-john-jango....a list of racing games with dates without having to put much work in.

I'm entering all the games I have physical copies of based on info in the user manual.I should be installing all these next week if the new Win7 installation co-operates and will fill in any blanks then.

Things seemed to be going pretty good with the initial install aside from the networking port on my mobo being dead.I played the MAME games that would just barely run full speed on XP64 and they perform exactly the same with Win7. Installed a network card this evening, activated Windows and now the PC freezes up constantly. I'm leaving it alone hoping it's win7 updating. (The install disc was SP1)

In other news, the current Steam update crashes the machine that's still running XP64.

In other, other news, I added a longer list of PC driving games (totaling 1,031) for reference, but don't bother adding any info to it.We'll keep posting the games we actually have on the smaller sheet, so it's easier to find.

Windows 7 does go on a patch-a-poluza after a fresh install. I normally just patch it as far as I can - installing everything along the way - right from the get go.

Is there anything in the event logs that would indicate a problem? Honestly I'd pull the NIC - as its what changed (with the hardware) now that's its locking up a lot. Or go to the mfg. home page for the NIC and find the latest driver.

I go through this every time I build a 2008r2 server at work (same basic code set as Windows 7). Patch patch patch! Then patch some more! And when thats done, patch it again! /ugh

I should have some time this weeked to try and work on the game list. I need to get a front end going on my cabinet too - I just hate working on the front end. I'd rather spend the time actually playing games.

Can we add a section to list out if emulation is possible i.e 99% playable (and works with a wheel)

Is it possible to get edit access to this list, i dont mind helping out test some games etc

Yeah, all of it refers to the actual console. I did the Dreamcast & Xbox info is based on looking at scans of the back covers.

I'm reluctant to mark them as playable in an emulator or not because that info would change over time and will become outdated.There are also multiple emulators for some of the systems. What works on one might not work on another.

If the game originally used analog inputs and the emulator supports analog inputs, then the game should be playable as long as the emulator is capable of running it. I'm pretty sure that all, or near all of the N64, Dreamcast, & Saturn games are fully emulated.

As far as access to the spreadsheet, updating it would involve using the real consoles or looking at box scans online to determine if it supported analog controls or networking. Did you want to do that, or just play test?

HmmWell I guess ultimately what I want is a full list of games that are fully playable incluing the use of the wheel.Then to also highlight the games that are actually decent and are worth playing.

I'm presuming some others may also want the same, so it would be good to combine efforts.Your lists are definitely going to help me get there. I wondered if I could simply have access to yours to highlight columns. and also add new games

HmmWell I guess ultimately what I want is a full list of games that are fully playable incluing the use of the wheel.Then to also highlight the games that are actually decent and are worth playing.

I'm presuming some others may also want the same, so it would be good to combine efforts.Your lists are definitely going to help me get there. I wondered if I could simply have access to yours to highlight columns. and also add new games

So using Romlister 0.28 and a MAME .150 -listxml dump, I came up with the following list of "driving" games. I'm not sure how valuable this information is - because I have no idea if they're 360 wheels, 180 wheels, or other random craziness. And it doesn't count Spy Hunter as a driving game - so not sure whats up with that.

I did exclude "light gun" games, so i know there is a least one driving game that had a light gun as part of the control set. Can't remember what its called.

I came up with 168 "games" - clones excluded. I can reproduce this list quickly and with different options, so if you want something else, let me know.

Oh, MAME .150 assumes all these games are playable too. Some of them are crazy old.

So using Romlister 0.28 and a MAME .150 -listxml dump, I came up with the following list of "driving" games. I'm not sure how valuable this information is - because I have no idea if they're 360 wheels, 180 wheels, or other random craziness.

For those who only want to have the necessary roms, it might be useful to compile a list of what other drivers/roms are needed for all these games to run.

I know for Spy Hunter, the sound board roms were offloaded to midssio.zip because multiple games used the same sound board.So you need midssio.zip in addition to spyhunt.zip for the game to run. (at least for versions 0.145u7 or newer)

For those who only want to have the necessary roms, it might be useful to compile a list of what other drivers/roms are needed for all these games to run.

I know for Spy Hunter, the sound board roms were offloaded to midssio.zip because multiple games used the same sound board.So you need midssio.zip in addition to spyhunt.zip for the game to run. (at least for versions 0.145u7 or newer)